37 research outputs found

    App-based support for parental self-efficacy in the first 1,000 days: A randomized control trial

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    Parental self-efficacy is key for guiding parents’ interactions with their child and is an important target for early intervention. This study reports a pilot randomized control trial (RCT) of a parenting application (app) with 79 parents of children aged 0–6 months in the United Kingdom. The app includes 1,026 daily age-appropriate activities across eight areas of child development, using resources accessible at home. While controlling for pre-test scores, parents who used the parenting app (Treatment Group) had significantly higher parental self-efficacy, after the 4-week intervention period, compared to the Active Control Group. Partial correlation analyses indicated that higher frequency of self-reported use of the parenting app was associated with greater parental self-efficacy outcomes. This evidence establishes proof of concept that parenting apps can have significant benefits on parental self-efficacy in early childhood. Limitations to the interpretation and generalization of the findings, as well as directions for future research are discussed

    Understanding the Impact of Childcare Ratios on Children’s Outcomes

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    The UK Government has recently consulted on changes to the statutory maximum staff-to-child ratios in early years settings in England in a bid to "improve the cost, choice, and availability of childcare" (DfE, 2022). Specifically, they have proposed altering the staff-to-child ratios for 2-year-olds from 1:4 to 1:5, bringing England into line with Scotland. The consultation also refers to wider options for reform, including changing staff-to-child ratios from 1:8 to 1:10 for 3-4-year-olds in settings for less than 4 hours per day, again in line with Scotland. There is strong evidence demonstrating that attending high quality early childhood education and care settings has significant positive impacts on both short and longer-term child outcomes. However, there is little robust quantitative evidence, especially for the UK, on the impact of staff-to-child ratios in care settings – one determinant of setting quality – on children’s outcomes. This severely limits our ability to inform decisions about the most appropriate childcare ratios

    Secondary Benefits to Attentional Processing Through Intervention with an Interactive Maths App

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    Previous research has shown that a specific interactive app, designed to support the development of early mathematical skills and delivered on hand-held tablets, is effective at raising mathematical attainment in young children in low-and high-income countries. In the countries where this app has been deployed, teachers have consistently reported improved concentration skills in children who have received intervention with this app. To investigate the legitimacy of these claims, we conducted secondary data analyses of children’s performance on core cognitive tasks to examine if additional benefits are observed in children who received intervention with the interactive maths app compared to those that did not. We drew on data from a three-arm randomised control trial conducted in a primary school in Malawi (Pitchford, 2015). In addition to assessing mathematical skills, children’s visual attention, short-term memory, and manual processing speed were examined at baseline, before the introduction of the maths app intervention, and at endline, after the intervention had been implemented for 8 weeks. A group of 318 children (73-161 months) attending Standards 1-3 of a Malawian primary school were randomised to receive either the new maths app (treatment group), a non-maths app that required similar interactions to engage with the software as with the maths app (placebo group), or standard teacher-led mathematical practice (control group). Before and after the 8-week intervention period children were assessed on mathematics and core cognitive skills. Results showed the maths app intervention supported significant and independent gains in mathematics and visual attention. Increases in visual attention were attributable only to interactions with the maths app. No significant benefits to attention were found from using the tablet device with non-maths software or standard class-based mathematical practice. These results suggest that high-quality interactive, educational apps can significantly improve attentional processing in addition to the scholastic skills targeted by the intervention

    Language Counts when Learning Mathematics with Interactive Apps

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    When available in multiple languages, educational apps can deliver the same mathematics instruction in the child’s first language or different language of instruction. This pilot study examined the feasibility of efficacy of a maths app intervention compared to standard mathematical practice with 61 children aged 5-6 years attending a bilingual immersion school in Brazil. The apps were delivered in either the child’s first (L1, Brazilian Portuguese) or second (L2, English) language, while app content, time on task, and school setting were consistent across the two treatment groups. Time on task in the comparison group was less. After 10 weeks, results showed children made significant mathematical learning gains with the apps, for both languages of instruction, compared to standard practice: the finding is discussed in relation to the threat of time spent on task. Children using the apps in Brazilian Portuguese (L1) completed more app topics than children using the apps in English (L2) and proficiency in language of instruction correlated positively with app progress through the apps. As children’s L1 was significantly stronger than their L2 proficiency, this suggests the apps were most effectively implemented in their L1. This study advances the conjoining of bilingual educational theories to educational apps in a controlled, real-world, bilingual immersion setting and highlights important directions for improving app-based mathematics instruction for bilingual children

    ADD UP UCL further reading dyscalculia and mathematical learning difficulties

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    ADD UP UCL infographic primary school

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    ADD UP UCL Abbreviations / Acronyms

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    ADD UP UCL Red flags for Dyscalculia

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    ADD UP UCL Dyscalculculia screener overview

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